HomeLocal NewsPope Francis sends 15,000 ice-creams to prisoners in Rome

Pope Francis sends 15,000 ice-creams to prisoners in Rome

Date:

Related stories

Kano govt declares Friday public holiday

The Kano State Government has declared Friday, September 12,...

Police arrest 3 armed robbery suspects, recover stolen vehicle in Kano

The Kano State Police Command has arrested three men...

Kano police clarify alleged detention of journalist Abdulaziz Aliyu

The Kano State Police Command has dismissed reports alleging...

Gov. Yusuf congratulates Hisbah chief Daurawa on honorary doctorate

Kano State Governor, Abba Kabir Yusuf, has congratulated the...

Kano govt bans unauthorized chainsaw use, launches permit system

The Kano State Government has banned the unregulated use...
spot_img

Pope Francis sent 15,000 ice-creams to prisoners to help them cool down during what has been one of the hottest summers on record in Italy.

The ice-creams were delivered to Rome’s two prisons – Regina Coeli in the centre of the city and Rebibbia on the outskirts – by the Vatican’s almoner, Cardinal Konrad Krajewski.

In a statement, the Vatican said the pope’s charities office “did not go on holiday” this summer. Instead, Vatican volunteers spent their time “continuing to devote themselves, among other things to two of the seven works of mercy: visiting prisoners and consoling the afflicted”.

The donation was among one of several “small evangelical gestures” made during the summer “to help and give hope to thousands of people in Rome’s prisons”, the statement added.

In June, about 20 inmates from Rebibbia prison met the pontiff before joining him on a visit to the Vatican Museums.

The Vatican’s charity office also took small groups of homeless people “to the sea or the lake … for an afternoon of relaxation and dinner in a pizzeria”.

This summer has been one of the hottest on record in Italy, with Siracusa, a city in Sicily, logging a high of 48.8C (119.85F) in August, potentially the highest temperature ever recorded in Europe. Severe wildfires also swept through Italy’s southern regions and the island of Sardinia, with the high temperatures and strong winds hampering efforts to contain them.

Krajewski, 57, was named almoner, a job the pope transformed into a hands-on charitable mission, in 2013. He has worked discreetly, for the most part, for the poor for years. However, in May 2019 he made headlines after climbing down a manhole and breaking a seal to restore electricity to a building in Rome where 250 homeless people were living. [MSN]

Subscribe

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here